Hammond Times, Volume 2, Number 108, Hammond, Lake County, 23 October 1907 — Page 4
THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES
i .
a he Lake County Times
N hlYKJXUKi NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED BY THE LAKE COUNTT PRINT. ING Al PUBLISHING COMPANY.
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MAIN' OfFICES HAMMOND, I.D. .TELEPHONES 'JAUMO'Vn, 111112. WHITING, 111. E.A81 CHICAGO, UU X.T)IAXA HARDOK, lit SOUTH CniCACO, 3 IO. fOUTK CHICAGO OFFICE 0140 BUFFALO AVENUE. TELEPHONE . VtiiiV-.lGS REPRESENTATIVES PAYNE Jt YOUNG. 7B0 JtAKQlET-E ni ll.DINO. CIIfCAGO BIO POTTER nuiLUING, NEW YORK.
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CIRCULATION YESTERDAY
!
9
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It is
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WITH THE EDITORS
THE PRESIDENT AND THE PANIC. The present condition of business in the United States is without parallel or precedent in the last hundred years. The country has more stored-up wealth than ever before in its history. The money savings of the people are larger. They are more widely diffused. Not only the fixed capital of business but the Huid capital that should be available for enterprise is more abundant than at any previous time in the nation's history. The farmers, on whose broad foundation the prosperity of the nation is sun-
posed to rest, have fewer debts and.
larger bank deposits than are registered in the books of any past year. Moreover, even with their smaller crops, they will receive greater sums from sales in Europe than any that heretofore have come to their hands. Yet for a year or more the country has seemed under a blight. Enterprise has paused; confidence has wavered; the money onca placed in the bank has been left to lie instead of beins put forth to fructify. Those securities which constitute the umbilical cord between money and industry have withered till they no longer serve their purpose. Not only on the larger exchange in New York, but on the little exchanges from Rochester to Denver, values have shrunk until 9 and 10 per cent investments have become plentiful, 7 and 8 per cent Investments common, and 6 and 7 per cent Investments absolutely multitudinous, regardless of who promoted r operated the business in question or tvhere its securities were listed. Securities that represent no trust, that are not listed In Wall street, that never felt the hand of a Rockefeller or 1 Ilarriman, have plunged down, down, and ever down, simply because the people at largo would not draw their money from the banks to buy them at any price. In a word, with all material circumstances for prosperity, enterprise, and hope, this country has ceased to be a 4 or even 5 per cent country, and has Kone back to the S and 9 per cent conditions of thirty years ago.
And today, with a garden of opportunity around them and with the whole paraphernalia of prosperity at hand, the American people read from day to day the telegraphed reports of a financial etress and struggle, which seems as incongruous in the surroundings as the moon at midday. Why is this? Why does enterprise sicken in the midst of plenty? Why do we halt on the way, though the sun of prosperity still lights us? Why are we faint-hearted, with all the material means of Industry and commercial achievement in our hands? Why do we pause in the fight as if victory were not for us? Why do we let ourselves be pushed back into conditions that seemed forever passed a quarter of a century ago? The answer is plain. All these things ?have come to pass because the president of the United States has seen fit to bring them to pass for purposes which he has declared to be adequate and to be worth, in hfs opinion, the price which the rest of us are being called on to pay. .For a year or more before last Jan. 1 the president saw tit, for his own purposes, to assail and denounce certain American citizens who were possessed of large properties. Since the beginning of this year he has gone further. His assaults and denunciations have been far more vehement. Their scope has been widened until they cover the continent. Beginning with Messrs. Ilarriman and Rockefeller and five or six other men of great wealth in Xew York, he h;is gradually included within the radius of his denunciations practically all men of large rroperty in the United States, and even large accumulations of property themselves. At first content with the program whi-h would bring the regulation and control of the railroads of th United
States into the hands of the United! States government, he has gone on un- j til in his St. Louis speech lie has de- ' manded the regulation and control of i practically three-fourths of the Indus- j trial concerns in the United States be! assumed by a bureau at Washington.
With the progress of this astonishing program, moreover, the president has become even more violent In his language. Andrew Johnson. on his celebrated swing around the circle, was really a model of moderation, if judged by his speeches. In comparison witn President Roosevelt on his recent tours. 'Malefactors," "predatory classes," "predatory wealth," "wreckers," "gamblers.", "bribers," "corruptionlsts." "undesirable citizens." "swollen, fortunes,"
"oppressors of wage workers," are a
lew among a hundred similar denunciations that have come from him like a torrent. Threats of "the penitentiary" have been flung right and left not only by the presi.lent. but by his department of justice. The vocabulary of scorn and contempt and denunciation has been practically exhausted by him and for what? To set forth his purpose of punishing rich and poor criminals alike, ns they were brought before the bar of justice. This is the statement made for him, we believe, by those of his friends who have approved the president's speeches in the last twelve months. As if the orderly processes of law could be enforced only by inflammatory and denunciatory appeals to the multitude! As if the wheels of Justice could not be started by the United States attorney general except the president first appealed to the populace to condemn in advance the men against whom the evidence had not been even collected for the prosecution! As if it were necessary to stir the deadliest passions of the human heart before the president of the United States and his department of justice could proceed under the statutes of the United States to try in the federal courts those men whom they believed to be violating the federal laws! But the president has denounced only dishonest men, has been argued for him by his friends. No honest man, no honest business, need fear him. No man need lose confidence in a well conducted enterprise on account of his denunciations. Foolish words! The president of the United States Is not a dummy in a vacuum. He is a powerful man in a practical world. His lightest words weigh ten times more than the soberest sense of any other man in the United States. When the president of the United States takes it upon htmself on a great public occasion as at Harrisburg, or Provincetown, or St. Louis to mention with only a passing word the honest men who are at the fountains of industry and commerce and finance in this country, and to devote the most forceful, the most eloquent, and the most Impressive part of his speech to the denunciation of the "malefactors" and the "criminal" rich and the "swindlers"
in general who are in the marts of trade, what is the conclusion to be drawn by the average man who makes up eighty-nine millions of the ninety
millions in our population? When the president fo the United States, with all the circumstances and dignity of hi3 office, goes hundreds of miles to denounce the "malefactors" in American business and has but a passing word for the honest men, what conclusions are drawn and what impressions are made both in Europe and in America regarding the men and conditions in American Industry? For example: Had the president of this country repeatedly addressed a great audience with denunciations of the "malefactors" and the "crimlnals"in the labor unions of this country, had he emphasized the need of putting "in the penitentiary" the union leaders who had not been ever arrested, had he advocated with all the force of his vocabulary the policy of bringing labor unions under the supervision and administration of the federal government to stop their "crimes," how would his attitude toward the labor men have been regarded, not only by the labor men themselves, but by all other men who read his words? As hostile, as bitterly and belligerently hostile, of course. For illustration again: If the president of the United States had gone forth time after time to rulddress a great audience regarding the bankers of the United States; had he emphasized the statement with all the force which he posessed that there were "rascals" in the banking business; that there were "malefactors" whom he intended to punish, cost what it might; that many bankers in the United States ought to be "in the penitentiary," what would have been the effect on public opinion and on the banking business in this country? Even though he had mentioned the fact in passing that there were honest bankers, how many banks would have withstood this onslaught? And would his words have conveyed the Impression that he was friendly or hostile to the banking interests In the United States? Hostile, bitterly and belligerently hostile, of course. Let every one multiply the illustrations for himself. The possible number is Infinite. These two suffice. They suffice to show why the securities of American railroads were the first to yield to the onslaught; why fourteen billion dollars of railroad investments shivered and broke beneath the president's repeated onslaughts;
In V101 ot our rallrad securities jn Europe, hastened to throw them -ack on the American market, under the impression that they were at the mercy of nono but rascals and rogues as long as they held them. They suffice to explain why the onslaughts of the president on "malefactors" in other industries, as he has widened his policy and the circle of his
denunciation, have been received by the people at large, first with astonishment, then with indle-nati.
nnany with a loss of confidence in
everybody who had property enough to finance a great undertaking or energy
10 organize a great enterprise Sll Ihla tv,. , .
- wo reaa. in our n - i t , -1 . 1-. -. v . .
a u! conuitions m the east
wn.cn will make many a cheek blanch
wun apprehension and will bow many
neaa in sorow and distress, a terrible price.
It is a terrible price to pay in order
i-iat the president might vent his personal scorn on four or five men in New York who have criticised his administration; in order that he might appear
nerore the world as the one honest man
in the United St.itr.j (io-htin r. ,i
-fncy, wun nis back to the wall, against the rest of this nation; in order that he might call to his aid, in
u-uuuion to the orderly processes of
law, the wrath of a great people aroused; in order that Mr. Ilarriman and Mr. Rockefeller and Mr. Rogers and Mr. Hill and others, for whom the
country at large cares nothing, might feel the weight of his arm and acknowledge publicly the self-evident fact that a president of the United States is above us all in power. For, in order that these things might
He demonstrated, and in order that
these few men might be punished, a million, two million, prehaps three million, families will be sorrowing within the next thirty days, as they look on their shrinking fortunes and feel that cruel loss of confidence with which half of the country Is stricken today and perhaps the whole country will be stricken before New Yeas's. It Is worth the price? It the fact that John D. Rockefeller or E. H. Ilarriman or James J. Hill ls worth a few millions less than he would have been worth if Mr. Roosevelt had not started his campaign against men of property In this country, and that they are all jeered at by the multitude is that worth the general distress that has been spread hither and thither by the disasters of the last few days? And, finally, is thi3 nation fallen into that condition of chaos, has the machinery of our courts become so weak and worthless, have the laws of the United States become so Inadequate and impotent that justice cannot be administered in this republic, that the
guilty cannot be punished, that the in
nocent cannot be protected, without the tinging of thunderbolts and the
shattering of skies from the White House, without the prostration of industry, and the devastation of the for
tunes of millions of citizens who have
sinned neither under nor against the
law? We believe not. We believe not. We believe that the - president of the United States has erred, and erred
greviously even disastrously. We be
lieve that, needlessly, recklessly, he has insisted upon robbing this great
nation of confidence in its own industry, commerce, finance, and trade, and we do not believe now, and never shall, that the plea so frequently made for him that he ls honest is an adequate
plea.
That a man is honest, as every one
of his predecessors in the White House
has been honest, is utterly beside the
question a trivial excuse, indeed, for scourging back a whole nation from
the heydey of a glorious prosperity.
Chicago Inter-Ocean.
Wcilnosrinv. Oct. 2.1. 1007.
FOR
MADAM AND MADEMOISELLE By SUSIE SMITHERS.
SPORTING GOSSIP By GIL. The Sox team will beat it to Cuba
about the first of the week where
they intend to do a little barnstorming and pick up a bushel of sheckels. The Cubans have a few good ball teams and have really studied the game so that they can give any American team an argument. Among the men who will make the trip are George Davis. manager; Charlie Hickman, Jakey Atz, Louis Fiene, Mike Welday, Hub Hart, Nick Altrock, Charlie Armbruster and Eddie Hahn. Major Delmar outtrotted Sweet Marie yesterday at Poughkeepsle In a match race and won out of three heats. The mare got In on the second heat, when the Major broke badly. Stagg Is up to his old tricks of bringing out the freshmen stars in practice with the 'varsity. Yesterday he uncovered a new one, Bunny Rogers of last year's North Division team. Bunny showed the 'varsity backs how easy it was to score against them and from the quarterback position made a twenty-five yard run for a touchdown. Albert L Corey, the First Regiment runner, will leave for Milwaukee where he will make his start in the 100 mile record run. which he Is attempting. Hatch will pace him in the first ten miles and other runners will assist along the way. He will end up in Chicago. They have another quarterback at Yale on the second squad that Is touted as a commer and will be a worthy successor to Tad Jones, Dines. Rockwell and other stars of the past few years. His name is Bingham and he pulled off some star work yesterday. Kid Goodman will be the opponent of Packy McFarland tonight at Fort Wayne where they go ten rounds to a decision. Goodman has never been knocked out and Packy will try and see what he can do along that line. The Boston boy is not in such a shape as he was when he cut Neary and Herrara to ribbons and won from the best In the country. However, he showed a flash of his old time form a while ago, and he knows that he must do something tonight or go down to the preliminary class. Monte Cross, the old timer who was forced from his position as shortstop on the Philadelphia team, has been offered a managerial bearth on the Kansas City American Association team. He accepted George Tebeau's proposition at ones.
Business women have yet to learn how to preserve their own health, for few of them are willing to accept the fact that although they are penetrating into man's world, they have not, and probably never will have, the rhysicial
endurance of the men about them. After a while women will learn what occupations suit them best physically and mentally and they will educate themselves to the necessary routine of business life adapted to their powers. They will also learn to conserve their superabundance of nerve force and use it In the right way. A woman can never hope to make a success In her work or profession until she gains control of her nerves. This Is the first and great commandment to be remembered by the woman In business. And the second is like unto it, in that she must keep her business life and her home and social existence absolutely apart and allow neither one to interfere with the other. Office worries should be resolutely shaken off when the office doors are closed, and on the other hand, the life outside the office must not be allowed to encroach upon business hours, so far as to injure success in that business or to impair the health. As a rule the conscientious woman of business whether she be in an office or store, or a teacher, allows her work to absorb all her thoughts, waking and
sleeping until she sinks Into quite as hopeless a rut as does her sister at home, who is overburdened with domestic duties. It is absolutely necessary for every woman in business to have an outside Interest aside from her routine work if she desires to keep well mentally and physiclally and to look bright and contented. Now, by outside Interest is not meant a too gay social life, which means late hours, unfitted for early rising the next morning, nor absorbing interest in the latest novel which draws her mind away from her work. By no means. The business woman, like the business man, must learn that there is a limit to human capabilities, and find out just how much excitement she can stand
without feeling the ill effects both in
health and appearance. The last mentioned brings another point of view into the discussion. No employer likes to see his employes look dull and spiritless, working in a mechanical, heartless way and appearing sallow and shall we add, discontented? When the body is in poor condition the effects show first upon the face until even the expression is altered. The business woman soon learns that her health is her most valuable asset and she knows that It is cheaper to take care of herself than to pay doc
tor's bills. Women too often relv nnon
their nervous force to carry them
through the day they do at least, until a fit of illness results in a bitter awakening to the fact that the human machine requires as careful adjustment as the most delicate machnery.
The complexion suffers the most per
ceptibly from the effects of a seden
tary life, and the girl whose work
keeps her indoors most of the day must see to it that she takes means to counteract the results brought about
Krams to allow a
ize to which one
centrepiece of tho ls accustomed.
ty bending too long over a desk with present simple lines of decoration, insufficient fresh air and exercles to , There are no hard and fast rule-s In keep her system in good condition. j regard to the size ot the letters. That
me complexion cne'l- afTrfoi? hv i is larsrelv taste.
Our Pattern Department
A STYLISH LITTLE DRESS, SUITABLE FOR EITHER BOY OR GIRL.
the nerves, by the liver and by impure air. The girl who lives in a state of nervous excitement can trace the effects upon her face in a roughened muddy skin and ugly lines about her face. A bad digestion adds to the mischief, and yet how few business women eat the proper kind of a lunch, or indeed, attend properly to any of the three meals a day! , A hurried but heavy breakfast, followed by hasty walk, or a ride in a crowded car to the office; a lunch taken at irregular hours, and not sufficient or digestible when partaken of, followed by a heavy dinner upon reaching home at night tired and shopworn. That is not the way to have a clear, fresh complexion, nor is tho employment at fault in this case. Another mischief wrought upon the skin is the neglect of toilet niceties. The grime of the street works into th pores of the face and hands, and is not carefully removed at night. A sensitive skin is hopelessly ruined by neglect as by too much care. Impure soaps, unsanitary toilet perquisites and ignorance in knowing how to cleanse the face and hands properly all result in ugly skins. The woman in business will do well
nuiB iwuti accessories safely laid away in a box in her desk if she has no locker in which to store them. A cako of good soap which she knows agrees with her skin, a small towel, nn orange stick and a comb should be included in her list, supplemented by whatever else she finds necessary to her comfort and cleanliness. The office lavatory is no place in which to make an elaborate toilet, but an occasional cleansing of the hands and wiping off the face will do wonders to keep them both in good condition. It is at home that tho business woman must look after her personal ablutions most carefully. Before dinner at night she should, if possible, have a few minutes to rest, remove her office dress and redress her hair after washing her face and hands. A change of rainment is not only the sign manual of her release from office work, but it rests her before eating a heavy meal. Before retiring at night she should thoroughly cleanse her face and neck with a good cold cream, even if she can not take a regular bath every night. But the all-over scrub with water hot enough to be comfortable and pure soap will aid the many pores of the body to throw off the effete matter, induce restful sleep and do more than all the cosmetics in the way of clearing the skin. Give the nails a little attention, take down and brush the hair and try to perform all necessary duties which need not be postponed until morning, so the body and mind may be at rest and the toilet not hurried or neglected in the morning. If too tired to sleep try drinking a glass of hot milk before getting into bed. Upon rising in the morning draw several long, deep breaths of pure air at the open window and take a good stretch if there is no time to Indulge In further exercse. If near enough to your place of employment walk when the weather will permit, or at least part of the way, to get the benefit of the fresh morning air. The woman who can stand it will find a morning plunge or cold shower most invigorating and she should allow eufnelent time to rise and dress comfortably before breakfast. To dress hastily, breakfast while half awake and hurry away to work is a most uncomfortable and unhealthy thing to do and the evil effects are a dull headache and untidy feeling which last well through to the lunch hour. Go to bed so early as not to feel stupid and unable to rise next morning. This may be a drastic rule, but It Is an Important one. The business woman need not think that she must give up her friends and her home life because of confining hours. If she is tactful and cordial her friends will not lose sight of her and will arrange to see her when business does not interfere. At home she must take an Interest in the affairs of the family to keep herself from becoming a mere calculating machine. The writer knows many women who take up a course of reading, attend lectures and concerts and fairly educate themselves outside of very arduous office hours. They keep themselves young by it and they manage to avoid late hours except at the end of the week, and they are improving themselves mentally and physiclally and so adding to their commercial value.
ABOUT PLANTS. All plants growing in the garden that
are intended for house use should be lifted and potted early in Smtfrnhtr
Examine them carefully for insects and
I repeat this several times before finally I bringing them in. In transplanting do
Pattern No. 569S. This attractive ' rot use t0 large pots and aToia eivlng
100 mucn water.
one-piece model is one of the smart
est shown this season and is suitable 1
In potting plants that have been
growing in the garden It is a good
for either boys or girls. It will make pian to wash them thoroughly with
up charmingly in the soft woolens ja soapy solution to keep off insects, as well as the heavily washable ma- IB-o the same to your house plants which
terials. Dark blue mohair, showing !have been standing outside in their j STOMACH DISEASES:- Dyspepsia, Constipation, Piles, etc
Generally speaking, however, a fourinch monogram is used on sheet's, while the same style of letters only half the size, appears on the pillow
. Car"ful ueke..pors are n,Mv lv,k- " to the lc bill ns the firt means cutting d,)Wn t!XI.nj,M T,.e food ox wh'. C.? " lm'rly " n ice i n ik , ; v;: v.hc? u,r. treatru., Squire omo ,recial ! ' V f , ; d t!tut for the ice. tra i , Housekeeper gives this ex tra care she uin 1.... . .. rA
.. . , " Just as
cases.
is an appropriate size for a tablecloth, with napkins marked one and one-half or two inches. Just at pres-
'PoiU-d food
inree ana a nan or rour inches ! "UU'J nave paid for th, , ,
i'e rofrlgerat
K'P it in the cellar. Wash it
mucli
ent a rather severe straight letter la much in demand, and original designs are greatly favored. The majority of home needle workers do not realize that satin stitch ls by no means the only way initials may be worked, but one. the contrary, a monogram is often greatly enhanced by two or even three different kinds of stitches being used. Of course, when these fancy stitches are used care must be taken to select those which will show a contrast and yet preserve the correct relation between the different letters. Several different ideals may be utilized to good advantage on towels. Many inexperienced workers outline the letters, thus covering all inequalities. The letters should be carefully padded before embroidering by running them with darning cotton. Tho letters are to be worked in numbers 23 or 30 mercerized cotton for pillow cases, towels, and shams. There is very little change in placing the monograms on tablecloths and napkins. On tablecloths monograms are frequently placed at either eide of the centre, facing the ends of the cloth, with plenty of space between the mono-
a week with
Or 13 tO b i.a.l
oo!et corner of tho out thoroughly onca
M rt I T, 1 WnfAr r 1 w
kV!10 r' U the time!
elf Jut inside the eelicr
nere me outdoor food.
1 1 1 1 i .. j
.1 ia jn'ssuill1, -Milk
red, as it absorbs th
air
's a h!-h window, reach the
in glr.ss
must
be
cov-
e limuir!tl.
the nir. Cut the butter int
and keer It in jv Mm,., .,-...1 "
- - v I (II U M. KaT
a stone
water, changing the w.ter every third wy. Wrap cheese in tin foil, then put
u into a giiisS j,ir. H is best to keep the supply of meat
low as possible until
reamer sets
very cold
in. Cooked t',.,.11 im
keep several days In a moderately cool cellar without r.nv other care hut raw flesh will be the chief problem of the lcekss household. Roasts would be better jno:ly cooked within a few hours of the time they come Into the house. Fish Is not often kept uncooked many hours, but when U is necesry nprlnkle It with salt, or leave it soaking In a weak ,alt brine, living a dish, never tin or Iron for the purpose A set of old fashioned wire covers to set over uncovered food will protect It from mice.
I " i
AITH ITS $100,000 Capital and its y $65,000 earned surplus and undivided profits, its affairs managed by men of experience and financial standing, offers to its patrons the highest degree of safety in the transaction of their business.
fiUR NEW banking quarters, situated v- on one of the city's best corners, in a building owned by the President and one of the directors, occupied by the Bank under a long and favorable lease, offers to its patrons all that can be desired in an up-to-date Bank home.
ESPECIAL INVITATION is given those who wish to start a savings account, upon which we will pay you 3 per cent, annually on $1.00 or more. Give us a trial, we believe we can please you.
A. M. TURNER, President. W. C. BELMAN,
Cashier.
n m
BaMHHRHIuriMBBSSB ,. .1 ., . , , , mm
THE HAMMOND DiSTlLLINQ CO. DAILY CAPACITY 3S.OOO QALLONa
J
m UNCLE SIEBSRT'S
THE MASTER PIECE BY A MASTER BAKER
Manufactured by BAKING CO.
THE HAMMOND Inc. Hammond Bldg.
THE FINSEN LIGHT AND ELECTRIC INSTITUTE DISEASES NOT ONLY TREATED BUT CURED AT THIS INSTITUTE
NERVOUS DISEASES:- Both Functional and Organic.
a hair line stripe of red is represent
ed in the illustration. The closing ls made invisible on the left side under a pla-k, and a feature that adds greatly to the attractiveness of the mode is a fancifully shaped yoke that extends down the front in panel effect. For a child of six years, two and fiveeighths yards of 36-inch material will be required. Sizes for 4, 6, S. 10 and 12 years. This pattern tvill be pent to you on receipt of 10 cents. Address all orders to the Pattern Department of this paper. Be sure to jrive size and number of pattern wanted. For convenience, write your order on the following' coupon:
Na 56SS. SIZE. NAME ADDRESS..
puis an summer. DHniMATiP.i. . . . t
- i . - I I 13.11 ; Acute V.fllvu"' oiiia .uuavuiaa , J, iLVlr :'0'SEASES W THE EAR. NOSE. THROAT AND LUNMMn al. their sta done so frequently as many persons SKIN DISEASES:- Eczema, Cancer, Tumors, etc. think necessary, if the roots, seem to ' BLOOD DISEASES:- and Diseases of the Heart. be coming out of the bottom it is a KIDNEY AND BLADDER DISEASES:- not curable in private practice. Chano aMu'stone XrZ LEASES OF WOMEN :- Inflations, Displacements, and all forms of FeOften adding fresh soil to the top of ! male D''sordersan old plant win answer quite as weiij sad tnn??tcriptly Suite 3CO-304 Hammond Bid?. HAMMOND. as repotting. Stir the oil soil carefuilv
bo as not to disturb the root growth !
take out an men or so from the top, and add a fresh rich loam.
DO NOT DELAY!
LETTERS FOR EMBUOIDEUY 1VOIIIC Along with simplicity In house furnishings come the more simple designs in letters for making linen. The curious little scrolls, curves and curleycues which adorned the old-faehioned line have gone out. and simple letters which follow straight lines are the vogue. A
new departure is made in placing one j
iener aoove me otfter In Japanese fashion, which gives marked lndlvidu-
alitv and conforms admirably to the 1 1-47 South Hohman St.
Nfow la the time to have that house piped for Gas lights. Estimates cheerfully given free upon application at the office, personally or by phone. outh Shore Gas 5 Electric
'Telephony' jq
V
